Professor Haulman to Retire in 2011

Looking
back over the past four decades, it may be difficult to find an undergraduate
student whose William and Mary experience wasn’t influenced by Clyde Haulman.

As a much-appreciated
economics professor, successful advocate of curriculum reform, notable author,
and community leader, there’s no question that Haulman has created an indelible
legacy at the College.

“His
fingerprints are all over this College,” it was noted when he received the
College's Thomas Jefferson Award in 2002. “He has been the catalyst for change,
our voice of conscience, our best friend and mentor at every turn.”

Most
colleagues would describe Professor Haulman as a quiet force with an unwavering
commitment to the College’s academic and administrative success. In the early
1990s while serving as Dean of Undergraduate Studies, Haulman led the College
through an ambitious curriculum reform which many hailed as a “minor
administrative miracle.”

“Every
plan for change meets some resistance’” says Associate Professor Barbara
Watkinson who worked with Haulman on curriculum reform. “In the case of the 1990-1993 undergraduate
curriculum overhaul, the relatively few faculty members and students who
objected to the proposal were very vocal and tenacious. Nevertheless, through
two years of multiple weekly meetings, Clyde was the voice of calm—sometimes
the only one—in public forums.”

Haulman
also stepped in as chair of the Department of Music, Assistant to the
President, director of the Marshall-Wythe Institute for Social Research, and chair
of the Economics Department.

All the
while, Haulman pursued his research interests in the early economy of the
United States, American economic thought, and Chinese economic reforms. His
work has been published in numerous economics journals, and he worked
passionately on his book, Virginia and the Panic of 1819, (2008), which his
wife, Fredrika Teute, an early American historian, describes as a “labor of scholarly
love.”

Through
the decades, his influence and commitment reached far beyond academic
accomplishments. He used his strong ties in the Williamsburg community to help launch
the College’s Sharpe Community Scholars Program, in which first-year students
apply concepts learned in the classroom to real world situations through
community engagement. He also had an important impact on the Reves Center and
the American Studies Program.

"Among
his many accomplishments, Clyde was the very first instructor in the Sharpe program,
supervising student research on alternative proposals to increase the
availability of affordable housing in Williamsburg,” says Charles Center
Director Joel Schwartz. “This is a concrete example of the way Clyde has been
able to integrate his teaching and research with his work with the city."

Many of
Haulman’s biggest fans simply admire him as their sharp-witted and engaging economics
professor. After earning his Ph. D. from Florida State University, Haulman
joined William and Mary’s economics department in 1969. A short time later, he
began teaching the Principles of Economics course. The big class was so popular
that it eventually moved to the large lecture room in Millington Hall and
quickly became a College institution.

Those
who know Haulman best would agree that his other important roles, like his
terms on the Williamsburg City Council and now as the city’s mayor, simply
underscore his legacy of working to expand the horizons of students and to improve
the lives of those who live in this community .

Note: Peter Atwater '83 has launched an effort to honor Professor Haulman through a named endowment fund that will provide undergraduate scholarships at William and Mary. Read more.